Seattle Summer Streets 2010 exploded onto Phinney and Greenwood last night as they barricaded the boulevard and people poured onto the pavement to celebrate.

Mayor Mike McGinn, like many participants, was blown away by the turnout. Bubble Man put on his usual delightful show, booths from Feet First, Streets for All Seattle, Walk Bike Ride and others set a “streets are for everyone” theme.

Sustainable Greenwood-Phinney, bringing a focus on living simply and climate change, had a boom box playing ’60s tunes for “Dancing in the Streets.”

Balmy summer weather aided turnout. Restaurants and pubs were jammed, Santoro’s Books had a display of doggie treats and pet books. An accurate estimate of the crowd was probably impossible as throngs milled along Greenwood from 65th to 87th, but it was well into four figures and jammed the main drag at its height.

Shannon Markley, wheelchair-bound from a recent biking accident, got a surprise birthday cake and “Happy Birthday!” choir from the gathering. The mayor even stopped by to say hello.

“This is beyond my expectations, beyond anyone’s expectations,” McGinn said. “It’s the perfect representation of what Summer Streets is for — anything you want it to be!”

]]>http://bikeintelligencer.com/2010/08/seattle-summer-streets-2010-hits-phinney-greenwood/feed/04187Shannon is OKhttp://bikeintelligencer.com/2010/08/shannon-is-ok/
http://bikeintelligencer.com/2010/08/shannon-is-ok/#commentsSat, 07 Aug 2010 18:41:11 +0000http://bikeintelligencer.com/?p=4048The only way you can keep Shannon Markley off the bike.

]]>For nearly all her life, civic advocate, volunteerist and all-around good person Shannon Markley has used a bicycle as her principle form of transportation. [Bike Intelligencerprofiled her bike-centric lifestyle in March 2009.]

So when she took a tumble and fractured her hip at N. 85th and Greenwood three days ago, her first thought was: I won’t be able to ride my bike for awhile!

Before the accident: Shannon with her newly powdercoated Marinoni

Shannon was taken to Northwest Hospital, where they inserted three stainless-steel screws in her hip. Yesterday, post-op, the pain was subsiding, she was feeling much better and expected to be able to go home today.

She blames the accident on “doing something stupid,” but it was the kind of thing any seasoned cyclist can relate to. The Greenwood crossroads is one of the busiest in the city, with little bike clearance from traffic. (Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn, a Greenwood resident, can vouch for this.) Although it’s always tricky to reconstruct an accident second-hand, it appears Shannon was going to continue riding in the street but found herself squeezed by cars, to the point where she decided to bail on the sidewalk. She thought she could just ride up the wheelchair-access curb ramp, but instead missed it and hit the curbside square on. The impact threw her from the bike and she hit on her side “really hard.”

“It could have been a lot worse,” Shannon recounted from her hospital bed. If a car had come along, or she’d landed on her head, “I’d be in a lot worse shape.” That’s typical Shannon, making the best of a bad situation and looking at the glass half full.

She’s already started physical therapy and plans an aggressive recovery but does not yet know when she’ll be back on her trusty teal (Bianchi green) Marinoni.

“You know,” she said, “This will be the longest I’ve been off my bike in what, 52 years!”

]]>http://bikeintelligencer.com/2010/08/shannon-is-ok/feed/24048The Carless Cyclist, Shannon Markleyhttp://bikeintelligencer.com/2009/03/the-carless-cyclist-shannon-markley/
http://bikeintelligencer.com/2009/03/the-carless-cyclist-shannon-markley/#respondThu, 05 Mar 2009 15:44:21 +0000http://bikeintelligencer.wordpress.com/?p=338I ride my bike a lot, but I drive a car as well. So I have to marvel at people, several of whom I know, who do not own a car. In Shannon Markley’s case, that has been her situation since 1976. Shannon’s biography could be called “Life on a Bike.” She began cycling at […]

I ride my bike a lot, but I drive a car as well. So I have to marvel at people, several of whom I know, who do not own a car. In Shannon Markley’s case, that has been her situation since 1976.

Shannon’s biography could be called “Life on a Bike.” She began cycling at the age of 7 and can take you to the exact spot on Beacon Hill where she learned to ride. For many of us, the bike represents an implement of independence, a moment in our young lives when we became, literally, self-empowered. The impact of learning to ride was to prove for Shannon far greater than what for most people is the later equivalent, getting a driver’s license.

Life on a bike

Shannon saw no need for a DL and waited till college to get her license. Her first car was the French-made Simca, a real “tin can,” she recalls, that would shimmy and rattle driving down I-5 to Highline Community College “so much I thought it was going to explode.” Later her well-intentioned father, who had insisted she learn to drive, gave her a convertible. She drove it for awhile, never saw the need, and wound up giving the car back.

Shannon today gets everywhere by bike, even preferring to ride at night because there’s less traffic. In December Seattle’s snowstorm gave her a chance to rehab her trusty Marinoni. She took it in to Recycled Cycles and recalls “them just shaking their head, wondering how the thing even pedaled.” She replaced the drive train, purchasing three new chains for rotating every month to even wear on her cogset and chainrings, spruced up the brakes and wheels. But she’s happiest with her new light green paint job, which is very close to the classic Bianchi “Celeste.” (You can compare her bike to my bike’s saddle nose in the photo’s background; the saddle is a Bianchi team issue.)

Shannon got the powder-coating done at Seattle Powder Coat. Powder-coating is a durable, more even, and “greener” process than painting, and Shannon’s bike looks brand new. She’s even emailing for instructions on how to obtain a new set of decals.

The whole upgrade cost less than $400 ($175 for power-coating alone), and Shannon feels she has a new bike for what would normally cost her minimum $1,500 to $2,000. Life is that way for her: Shannon knows how to slice costs to the bone. She once gave me a coupon for $10 worth of gas that she of course had no use for. When she gave it to me, $10 bought a quarter of a tank. By the time I used it, it just about filled the tank!

Shannon spent much of the past three years building a new off-the-grid, completely green and sustainable house in Bainbridge, which she rents out to help support her simplified lifestyle. She keeps her living costs down by house-sitting and using publicly available computers at places like libraries and the Phinney Neighborhood Association. We met through my wife Cecile‘s work on simplicity and the slow life.

I run into Shannon all over the city on my bike. She’s usually off to a community meeting or public hearing to testify on something progressive and good. She not only walks the talk, she rides it. The sticker on her rear fender says it all: “Give Cyclists [image of three feet] of Space.” The Bicycle Alliance is working on legislation in Olympia to do just that.